To the Fore: Female Pioneers in Slovenian Architecture, Civil Engineering, and Design

6 March - 20 April 2017 | DESSA Gallery |  Židovska steza 4, Ljubljana

 

Architecture exhibition “To the Fore: Female Pioneers in Slovenian Architecture, Civil Engineering, and Design”, prepared by Centre of Architecture and the France Stele Institute of Art History of ZRC SAZU, in collaboration with DESSA Gallery, aims to shed light on the life and work of a neglected part of Slovenian architectural creation and provides an opportunity to highlight – from the rich architectural body of work of the 20th century – the works that are only rarely exhibited and showcased, but nonetheless important, high-quality, and multi-layered.

The exhibition is thematically part of the activities of the international interdisciplinary project MoMoWo (Modern Movement Women) – Women’s Creativity since the Modern Movement, taking place at the France Stele Institute of Art History of the Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences of Arts with a view to present to the professional and general community an important part of the “anonymous” and withheld European cultural heritage of the 20th century, created by the women involved in architecture, civil engineering, interior and industrial design, landscape architecture, and urban design, i.e. fields that are (supposed to be) in the traditional domain of male professions.

The second in this series of exhibitions is dedicated to the female pioneers, the first pre-war and post-war generations of female designers who played an active role in drafting, designing, and leaving a mark on the environment of their time. They were the silent companions working in the shadow of professionally more acknowledged and known professors, colleagues, fathers, and husbands, so that, even nowadays, it is difficult to determine their actual part in the design and implementation of many Slovenian architectural masterpieces, from Jože Plečnik’s National and University Library building to Edvard Ravnikar’s Republic Square (Trg republike). Their work was, as a result of social prejudice, restricted to only some fields of architecture, such as drawing of plans, park designs, interior and industrial design, and urban design, while they were rarely involved in public and individual building; when they had a family they had to limit their activities even further. Thus some of them redirected their creativity elsewhere, usually to the artistic domain.

The selected works are thus important project creations of the first generations of Slovenian female designers who should be, by considering the conditions, and the role of women at the time, regarded and assessed using different criteria than otherwise. The exhibition has a multi-layered design, with a focus on the quality of works and the complexity of the idea, revealing the creative power of the authors. The works of ten architects, civil engineers, and designers are presented, i.e. from the first pre-war graduates to the post-war generations as well.

More information at the official webpage